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. 2001 Mar 30;48(2-3):317-33.
doi: 10.1016/s0920-9964(00)00097-9.

Psychomotor slowing and planning deficits in schizophrenia

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Psychomotor slowing and planning deficits in schizophrenia

B J Jogems-Kosterman et al. Schizophr Res. .

Abstract

The relative contribution of cognitive and motor processing to psychomotor slowing in schizophrenia was investigated using three tasks: a simple line-copying task and a more complex figure-copying task, both following a reaction paradigm, and a standard psychomotor test, the Digit Symbol Test (DST). Various movement variables of the task performances were derived from recordings made with the aid of a digitizing tablet. The patients with schizophrenia appeared to be about one-third slower in their total performance time on all three tasks when compared with healthy controls, which suggests a general psychomotor slowing in this group. When itemized over the various movement variables, this slowing was found in both initiation time and movement time in the copying tasks and in the DST in the time to match the symbol and the digit, but not in writing the digit. Furthermore, in the figure-copying task it was found that increased figure complexity or decreased familiarity prolonged the initiation time. These latency increases were not significantly larger for the schizophrenia group as a whole, but only for a subgroup of patients with higher scores on negative symptoms. Regarding reinspection time, the effects of familiarity were larger in the schizophrenia group as a whole. These group findings suggest that patients tend to plan their actions less in advance, which, in the case of the more complex or unfamiliar task conditions, is a less sophisticated planning strategy. Given the longer latencies in patients with more severe negative symptoms, it seems that these patients have problems with turning a plan into action. The present study provides evidence of psychomotor slowing and planning deficits in schizophrenia.

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